I absolutely loved my time reading the book and it of course made me crave more. But that’s why I’m so very glad that this wasn’t the case with The House with the Golden Door by Elodie Harper. Sequels can often be disappointing and not live up to the first book which has happened to me more times than I can count. We return to Pompeii for the second instalment in Elodie Harper’s Wolf Den Trilogy, set in the town’s lupanar and reimagining the lives of women long overlooked. Yet finding love may prove to be the most dangerous act of all. In order to be free, she will need to be as ruthless as he is.Īmara knows her existence in Pompeii is subject to Venus, the goddess of love. Amara longs for the women she was forced to leave behind and worse, finds herself pursued by the man who once owned her. The life of a courtesan in Pompeii is glittering, yet precarious…Amara has escaped her life as a slave in the town’s most notorious brothel, but now her existence depends on the affections of her patron: a man she might not know as well as she once thought.Īt night she dreams of the wolf den, still haunted by her past.
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